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Fiscal
Policy and Global Growth |
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Jul
27th 2010, C.P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh |
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Barely
three years since the Great Recession first affected
the world economy, the focus of global attention has
shifted from the crisis and its origins to the legacy
left by the stimulus measures adopted by governments
in response to it. While this may be warranted by the
sheer passage of time, it does injustice to the facts
that not all governments opted for a significant, let
alone adequate, fiscal stimulus in response to the crisis;
that not all of the accumulated fiscal deficits are
attributable to voluntary measures. Indeed, some deficits
could be the result of the crisis itself because of
the need for large public spending to bail out banks
and other companies and also inasmuch as output contraction
adversely affects public revenues. Before turning to
austerity and fiscal consolidation, therefore, governments
may need to look at the evidence on fiscal stimuli and
their influence on growth a little more closely.
Unfortunately, as of now, comparable IMF data on the
cash surplus/deficit to GDP ratios for a large enough
sample of countries is available only till 2008. Since
the crisis broke in the second half of 2008, for many
countries this was the year when the fiscal stimulus
just kicked in, with much of the stimulus spending occurring
in 2009.
Even so, there are some messages that can be read from
the available evidence. Consider for example the cash
balances (surpluses or deficits) of governments defined
as revenue (including grants) minus expense, minus net
acquisition of nonfinancial assets. Of the ten (of 69)
countries that recorded the largest decreases in their
cash balance to GDP ratios (Chart 1) between 2007 and
2008 (Iceland, Mongolia, Maldives, Spain, Chile, Singapore,
Latvia, Turkey, United States and Pakistan), only Maldives,
United States and Pakistan actually had a cash deficit
in 2007, with the deficit to GDP ratio placed at 5.6,
2.2 and 4.2 per cent respectively (Table 1). Iceland,
Mongolia, Spain, Chile, Singapore Latvia and Turkey
had cash surpluses with the surplus to GDP ratios placed
at 4.82, 7.69, 2.44, 8.82, 12.05, 0.81 and 1.41 per
cent respectively. In the case of Maldives, the US and
Pakistan their 2007 deficits widened to 13.66, 5.54
and 7.41 per cent of GDP respectively in 2008. Iceland,
Mongolia, Spain, Latvia and Turkey saw their cash surpluses
turning to deficit to touch -12.78, -3.51, -2.01, -2.63
and -1.94 per cent of GDP in 2008. Chile and Singapore,
on the other hand maintained cash surpluses, though
at a lower level of 4.78 and 8.12 per cent of GDP in
2008.
Some implications of this plethora of numbers relating
to countries that experienced the largest deterioration
in their cash balance ratios between 2007 and 2008 should
be noted. To start with, only three of these countries,
namely Maldives, the United States and Pakistan can
at all be seen as countries that lacked the ''fiscal
headroom'' in 2007 to adopt countercyclical fiscal policy
measures in response to a recession. With the others
recording a surplus cash balance position in their government
accounts just before the crisis, they were in a position
to respond with fiscal measures, since pre-existing
deficits had not made new debt ''unsustainable''. The
countries that lacked the fiscal headroom did end up
recording significant deficits in 2008.
Secondly, three of the top four countries in terms of
the deterioration of fiscal balances between 2007 and
2008, were countries that had recorded cash surpluses
in 2007. Of these, only Iceland saw a significant deterioration
in its fiscal position with its deficit to GDP ratio
rising to 12.8 per cent. Thirdly, of the top ten countries
in terms of deterioration of fiscal balances, only four
(Iceland, Maldives, the US and Pakistan) had cash deficit
to GDP ratios in excess of 5 per cent in 2008. Two (Chile
and Singapore) in fact had surpluses, as noted above.
Thus, at least by 2008, the crisis had not resulted
in any generalised tendency towards substantial deterioration
of fiscal balances.
Chart
1 >>
Fourthly, none of the top ten countries in terms of
deterioration of fiscal balances, except for Iceland,
had recorded increases in expenditure to GDP ratios
in excess of 2.5 percentage points of GDP between 2007
and 2008. In other words, at least in 2008, these were
not the countries that had resorted to huge fiscal stimuli.
The country that saw an unusually high increase in the
expenditure to GDP ratio of 15 percentage points was
Iceland. This was also the country that had to put up
a large amount of money to cover the loans and deposits
its banks had to repay when the crisis rendered worthless
the speculative investments they had made using deposits
and credit from abroad. That is, Iceland's fiscal situation
was not a reflection of its stimulus spending, but of
the provisioning needed to prevent a financial collapse.
Finally, there is no clear relationship between the
decline in the cash balance to GDP ratio between 2007
and 2008 or the level of the cash deficit to GDP ratio
in 2008 and the relative GDP growth performance of countries.
Almost all countries (excepting for Mongolia) recorded
a significant decline in growth rates, with the extent
of deterioration in performance varying widely (Chart
2). This clearly was related to the extent to which
individual countries were affected by the financial
crisis per se and the manner in which individual countries
are locked into the global economy.
Chart
2 >> Table
1 >>
Thus,
at least till 2008, there could be no clear link established
between the impact of the crisis in individual countries,
the fiscal response of governments to that crisis and
the deterioration of the fiscal position of countries.
In fact, slower growth and the need to make large outlays
to salvage the financial sector rather than stimulus
packages may have been responsible for whatever deterioration
in fiscal position occurred. This would mean that the
argument that the stimulus in response to the crisis
had gone too far, creating new problems attributable
to fiscal deterioration, and therefore needs to be corrected,
is simply not valid in most cases and only partially
true in others.
The problem, however, is that 2008 was still an early
point in the unfolding of the crisis and the response
to it and therefore analyses based on data till that
year may not be revealing the full picture.
There are, however, a few countries for which actual
or provisionally estimated numbers for 2009 are available
from the IMF's government financial statistics. Evidence
from these 37 countries does seem to suggest that there
was further significant deterioration in the fiscal
position of many countries during the year 2009 with
significantly higher declines in the cash balance to
GDP ratio between 2007 and 2009 and significantly higher
cash deficit to GDP ratios in 2009. However, what is
noteworthy is that this fiscal deterioration was accompanied
by a substantial worsening of the growth performance
of many of these countries. This suggests either that
the fiscal deterioration was not reflective of an actual
stimulus that impacted positively on growth or that
the stimulus was inadequate given the gravity of the
crisis in many countries or that the deceleration in
growth or intensification of recession affected revenues
adversely, thereby worsening the fiscal position of
the countries concerned.
Table
2 >>
Consider, for example the five countries in the 2009
sample that recorded the largest declines in their cash
balance to GDP ratios between 2007 and 2009 (Table 2).
All of them recorded negative cash balances (deficits)
relative to GDP in 2009. Yet every one of them recorded
a substantial deterioration in growth rates in 2009.
This evidence, once again, points in three possible
directions. It could be that the deficit does not represent
a stimulus effort, but is the result of expenditure
such as bail-outs for bank that do not have much of
an effect on demand and production. Second, it may be
the case that the crisis was so severe that the component
of increased expenditure that constituted a true stimulus
was inadequate to trigger a recovery. Or, third, it
could be that the impact of the crisis on growth was
so adverse that the resulting fall in government revenues
substantially widened the cash deficit, even when increases
in stimulus spending were limited or non-existent.
If any of these holds then it is definitely not true
that deficit spending has been pushed far enough and
that it is time to hold back on expansionary spending.
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